| Mark Dery (by way of Pit Schultz <pit@contrib.de>) on Sat, 7 Jun 1997 00:02:17 +0200 (MET DST) |
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| <nettime> Lost in the Ether |
[mark dery speaks in Berlin today, organised by joerg koch and
a spontanous email network, this text relates to a post of steve
cisler, as mark said, more soon.. /p]
* * *
Past Perfect
It's hardly news to any mallcrawler that the food court is our
new town square, nor to any city-dweller that the commons is being
theme-parked for mass consumption, as in Universal Studios'
CityWalk---an ersatz La-La Land-cum-outdoor shopping mall, located
in Universal City, that jump-cuts from Malibu to Melrose Avenue,
Sunset Strip to Venice Beach in the space of a few overscaled,
overdesigned blocks. In a _Los Angeles Times_ interview, principal
architect Jon Jerde insisted that CityWalk, despite its pomo Toon
Town aspect, is its own "real-life place," a bona fide neighborhood
rather than a theme-malled Mock Angeles. Chief project designer
Richard Orne extols the simulated "patina of use"---candy wrappers
embedded in the flooring, for instance---that implies a lived
history behind its pixilated streetscape. "People want to have a
communal experience in a place that they feel safe and
comfortable," he told the _Times. "Who cares if it's artificially
created if it does that and answers that need?"
The corporatizing of the commons---the replacement of landmark
neighborhoods by commercial simulacra (CityWalk), the usurpation of
Main Street's civic life by the mall, and the middle class's
retreat into privately policed, strictly regulated housing
developments---is becoming tolerable, even desirable to a society
struggling to reconcile a paralyzing fear of violent crime and the
loss of basic services with a deep-dyed distrust of government and
a fervent belief in the "free" market. This dynamic dovetails with
a widespread yearning for the lost (and for many of us, largely
imagined) community of an earlier America: _Our Town minus the
angst, _Huckleberry Finn with the slave-traders and the lynch mobs
left out---Disneyland's Main Street, U.S.A., by any other name.
By no accident, Disney is taking the obvious next step in the
corporatizing of everyday life, an experiment in social engineering
that contains the seeds of a privatized public sector---the hostile
takeover, in the not so far future, of the nation-state by the
multinational conglomerate. Celebration, the planned community
Disney is building near Orlando, Florida, welcomed its first
residents in June, 1996; within 10 to 15 years, the 4,900-acre town
will be home to a projected population of 20,000.
Celebration's residents will live in one of six neo-
traditional home styles (Classical, Victorian, Colonial Revival,
Coastal, Mediterranean, and French) based on regional prototypes in
what the _Downtown Celebration: Architectural Walking Tour_
guidebook calls America's "best- and best-loved small towns," from
Charleston, South Carolina to East Hampton, New York. If reality
follows the Disney script, residents will promenade beside the town
lake; take in a movie at the faux Deco "picture palace"; or
socialize in Founders Park ("a civic space where, ultimately,
neighbors might congregate after walking their children to school,"
the brochure suggests, hopefully). They'll send their children
to Celebration School, a K-12 facility operated by the Osceola
County School Board; receive health care at Health Campus, a
medical center owned and operated by Florida Hospital; and shop,
bank, and post their mail in downtown Celebration. The
"Architectural Walking Tour" guidebook I obtained at the on-site
Preview Center calls Celebration "a traditional American town built
anew...designed to offer a return to a more sociable and civic-
minded way of life." After a stroll through the downtown area, I
called it Bedford Falls on prozac. The town suggests an eerily
literal realization of the Privatopias in Neal Stephenson's _Snow
Crash, Disney-esque monuments to smalltown America whose salient
features include picture-perfect lawns and stately brass fire
hydrants "designed on a computer screen by the same aesthetes who
designed the DynaVictorian houses and the tasteful mailboxes and
the immense marble street signs that sit at each intersection like
headstones. Designed on a computer screen, but with an eye toward
the elegance of things past and forgotten about."
Taking in the tasteful pastels and witty medley of
architectural styles, I couldn't shake the feeling that the
buildings had been scaled down, like the ones along Disneyland's
Main Street, U.S.A., where everything is built five-eighths true
size to give reality a whimsical, toylike quality. A vague
ontological queasiness settled over me, a postmodern malaise I'll
call the _Prisoner Syndrome: the unsettling suspicion that reality
is really theme-park fakery, stage-managed by unseen conspirators
with dark designs. Who will live here? The Audio-Animatronic
family from GE's Carousel of Progress? A Duracell version of the
Mayberry gang? Surveying the near-complete cinema, I bumped into
a perky young couple. He was a clean-cut, world-is-my-oyster type
whose parents live in Celebration; she was a cute brunette in
shorts and a bikini top who bore an unsettling resemblance to
Annette Funicello. Is Disney cloning these people from Mouseketeer
DNA?
Scratch the surface of Disney's Frank Capra idyll and the
cynical truth that Celebration is a company town---a media
monolith's vision of privatized governance and democracy overruled
by technocracy---lies exposed. The town's seal, a ponytailed girl
riding her bike past the proverbial picket fence, a playful pup
nipping at her tires, is a registered Disney trademark. Market
Street, the town's "primary shopping promenade," would have been
named Main Street, as in Disneyland, were it not for the fact that
"there already was a Main Street in Osceola County, and street
names can't be used twice," the brochure notes, with unmistakable
regret. Celebration's welcome wagon will include an official
history course that Celebration Foundation administrator Charles
Adams described, in _Harper's_, as "very similar to what we do when
we bring in a new cast member to work for the Walt Disney
Company." ("Cast member" is Disneyspeak for "employee.") Of
course, Celebration's only "history," to speak of, lies in the
CityWalk-ish "slightly aged" look that town co-planner Jacqueline
Robertson gave some of the downtown buildings, and in the houses'
fastidiously historical exteriors. No matter, assures Adams: "We
do have some history, really, going back to the original vision
from Walt."
Adams's comment points the way to the corporate agenda behind
Celebration's Hollywood backlot facade. The "original vision" on
which the town is based is EPCOT (Experimental Prototype Community
of Tomorrow), a Jetsonian technopolis conceived by Walt in the '60s
as a company town populated by Disney World employees. It was to
be a brave new experiment in urban planning and social engineering,
propelled by the thrusters of American technology---in Walt's
words, "a planned, controlled community, a showcase for American
industry and research." As realized in Disney World, EPCOT is a
corporate-sponsored science fair whose obsolete tomorrows smell
more pungently of mothballs with each passing year. Even so,
Walt's dream lives on in EPCOT's overarching theme of corporate
paternalism and technocratic solutions to social problems---the
bedrock conviction "that planning for the future can be left to
corporations which will 'maximize the common good,'" as Disney
scholar Alan Bryman puts it in his book _Walt Disney and His
Worlds_.
This, the "original vision from Walt"---the belief that father
knows best, be he "Uncle Walt," the self-styled "benevolent
dictator of Disney enterprises," or the corporation itself as
paterfamilias---is Celebration's cornerstone. Beginning with a
misty-eyed evocation of childhood memories, the town's promo video
promises that "there is a place that takes you back to that time of
innocence. A place where the biggest decision is whether to play
kick the can or king of the hill. A place of caramel apples and
cotton candy, secret forts and hopscotch on the streets. That
place is here again, in a new town called Celebration." In
Disney's "traditional...town built anew," residents will entrust
the burdensome responsibilities of civic life in a participatory
democracy to their corporate parents, just as the Disney-esque
Reagan left the dreary business of governing to others, "as if
government was a boring job best left to the grown-ups," as _New
York_ critic Rhoda Koenig once put it. An unincorporated town
under the jurisdiction of Osceola County, Celebration won't be
self-governing in any meaningful sense. Disney will exercise veto
power over the decisions of the homeowners' only representative
body, the community association, for 40 years or until three-
quarters of the master-plan residences are occupied, whichever
comes first.
As Russ Rymer argues in his penetrating _Harper's essay on
Celebration, Disney's planned community is consecrated to
"prevailing nostalgias for a bygone time of life, the life of a
carefree child, a civic infant, when the corporation could make the
rules and keep the peace, and the biggest decision left to the
citizen was whether to play kick the can or king of the hill."
In an America racked by social change and economic inequity, where
community and civility are fast unraveling, Disney promises to
time-warp an anxious middle class to a revisionist past (or is it
a neo-traditional future?) where our corporate parents unburden us
of our rights and responsibilities as citizens so that we may
frolic in secret forts and hopscotch on the streets like the inner
children we've always been at heart. The growing appeal of the
corporatized commons is evident in the fact that demand for
Celebration's initial offering of homes exceeded supply by almost
three to one, despite the fact that prospective buyers had nothing
to go by but models, videos, and promotional literature---and the
Disney name, one of the best-known, best-loved brands in the world.
Rymer quotes Celebration co-planner Robert A.M. Stern:
"People...almost glory in the fact that someone runs the show.
People love to come to Disney because the very word 'Disney' means
a certain authoritative standard that they will succumb to."
If dystopian forebodings of the public sphere theme-parked by
the private sector and, ultimately, participatory democracy
rendered obsolete by multinational capitalism seem like neo-Marxist
paranoia, as the "cyber-elite" would have it, consider Disney CEO
Michael Eisner's expressed belief that Celebration "will set up a
system of how to develop communities. I hope in 50 years they say,
'Thank God for Celebration.'" Consider, as well, the extralegal
status of Disney's Florida fiefdom, an expanse of real estate
larger than the island of Manhattan that is the workaday home of
approximately 30,000 employees. In 1967, Florida officials passed
legislation that granted Disney's holdings, the inoffensively named
Reedy Creek Improvement Area, the status of an autonomous county,
empowered to levy its own taxes and enact its own building codes
and exempt from filing environmental impact statements or abiding
by municipal or regional laws regarding development, zoning, and
waste control.
"Disney World is, before anything else, a governmental
entity," writes Rymer. "Walt's greatest feat of imagineering was
his vaulting of a theme park into a polity...Because [Reedy
Creek's] powers are allowed only to popularly elected bodies,
Disney instituted a 'government' that stayed firmly in company
control; voting 'citizens' were a handful of loyal Disney managers.
Walt's own enmity for democratic forms was legendary." Indeed,
Walt's original vision of Celebration, nee EPCOT, was premised on
the notion that the company would own the homes, renting them to
the town's residents: "There will be no landowners and therefore no
voting control," Walt happily declared.
Once, when asked by a journalist if he'd ever considered
running for office, he replied that he had no interest in being
president of the United States, remarking, "I'd rather be the
benevolent dictator of Disney enterprises." Then again, if he'd
"imagineered" a future like the one envisioned by the _Spy magazine
parody in which Michael Eisner was elected president while
remaining CEO of Disney, he might have reconsidered. Today,
Celebration; tomorrow, the world. "When you wish upon a star..."
- 30 -
(c) 1997 Mark Dery; all rights reserved. This essay originally
appeared in _21.C_ magazine.
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